PCB issues Fakhar Zaman show-cause notice after post in support of Babar Azam

The PCB has taken strong exception to the post, saying that Fakhar has brought the game in Pakistan into disrepute

Danyal Rasool15-Oct-2024Babar Azam’s dropping from the Pakistan squad has seen Fakhar Zaman entangled in a dispute with the PCB, with the cricket board issuing him a show-cause notice for a social media post. After news of Babar’s omission from Pakistan’s squad for the second and third Test broke, Fakhar took to X (formerly Twitter) before the PCB had officially announced the squad.He described the development as “concerning” saying “sidelining arguably the best batter Pakistan has ever produced” risked sending a “deeply negative message across the board”. He called on the PCB to “safeguard” players rather than “undermining them”.The PCB has taken strong exception to the post, telling ESPNcricinfo the batter had been issued a show-cause notice for bringing the game in Pakistan into disrepute. They have alleged that as a centrally contracted player, Fakhar had a responsibility not to make such comments against his employer in public. They are understood to be disappointed Fakhar did not raise any complaints privately.

ESPNcricinfo understands Fakhar has not responded to the notice, which was only issued yesterday. The penalty for the alleged code of conduct breach will depend on the response, and whether he accepts the charge. As of now, there has been no further comment from Fakhar, and the post remains up on X.The PCB has described Babar’s departure from the squad for the remainder of the series as a rest ahead of white-ball series in Australia, Zimbabwe, and South Africa. In context, though, that becomes trickier to justify given the importance of this series – which Pakistan are 1-0 down in, and the fact that Babar did not ask for a rest, and was willing to play the ongoing Test. He has been out of form in Test cricket for the best part of two years, having failed to score a half-century in the last 18 innings.

Robinho fala em podcast sobre recuperação judicial do Cruzeiro

MatériaMais Notícias

da pixbet: Robinho, meia do Paysandu, comentou sobre ação judicial contra o Cruzeiro, sobre à reclamação trabalhista feita por conta do contrato que durou entre 2016 e 2019, no podcast GE na Rede.

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da betano casino: O Tribunal do Trabalho de Belo Horizonte decidiu em junho deste ano que o Cruzeiro deveria pagar o valor de R$ 19 milhões ao jogador. Como não havia condições de pagar tal valor, o clube acordou o pagamento em 20 parcelas. Contudo, a Raposa não iniciou o pagamento, e Robinho acionou a Justiça.

– Está tentando fazer uma recuperação judicial, eu não entendo muito como que é. Estão falando que vão pagar apenas três (milhões) dividido em 18 anos. Parece que não é muito legal para o jogador, era bom quando estava jogando. Meus advogados estão em cima disso, mas os jogadores não estão sendo beneficiados. Não está sendo fácil de entender essas coisas da SAF e essa recuperação judicial que eles estão tentando – declarou o jogador.

+ A sua carreira no futebol pode começar hoje. Garanta a sua vaga no curso Gestor de Futebol e capacite-se!

O meia faz parte da Recuperação Judicial do Cruzeiro, que conta com o valor de R$ 1.859.404,53, número inferior ao proposto pelo TRT. A Justiça se manifestou e declarou que a ação deve prosseguir e pode haver revisão do valor dos créditos.

Robinho passou pela Raposa em 2016 e ficou por cinco temporadas. O jogador participou de 177 partidas pelo clube e, apesar de tudo, declarou carinho ao clube.

+ Com título na Copa do Brasil, promessas do sub-20 do Cruzeiro participam de treino junto ao elenco principal

-O Cruzeiro para mim foi o ápice da minha carreira, considero o melhor clube que eu joguei até hoje. Passei pelo Grêmio, que é uma potência muito grande, Palmeiras é gigante, Santos é top, Curitiba é sensacional, mas Cruzeiro, você entra no CT e se sente um jogador especial, as pessoas se sentem especiais lá, sabe que é um time grande mesmo. Foi o lugar que eu tive mais alegria, tive decepções também, que foi ano de 2019, que nós caímos. Foi uma coisa inexplicável, que eu não sei falar até hoje o que aconteceu. Teve salários atrasados, mas não foi só isso que fez não ganhar jogos, pois quando entramos (em campo), acabamos esquecendo. Não conseguíamos render, o time não andava, e tínhamos grandes jogadores, era um time para ser campeão brasileiro. Mas sem dúvida é o time que eu tenho mais carinho na minha carreira – comentou Robinho.

O primeiro contrato entre o atleta e o clube celeste terminou em 2019, e foi firmado um novo acordo no ano seguinte, que ia até dezembro de 2021. Após a primeira rescisão, o Cruzeiro ficou devendo mais ou menos R$ 2 milhões ao meia.

+ Combinada dos artilheiros! Aposte R$100 e ganhe R$1200 com Suárez, Tiquinho e Vegetti

+ Mais uma vítima? Aposte R$100 e ganhe R$360 com vitória do Botafogo contra o América-MG no Brasileirão

How Mohammad Hafeez has been a T20 giant in 2020

In a confounding, chaotic year, one man hit an unexpected purple patch in the shortest format

Osman Samiuddin17-Dec-2020Ending the year trying to understand how Mohammad Hafeez is the answer to Pakistan’s T20 batting issues feels appropriate for 2020 – a damned year, yes, but also a confounding and unexpected one. Hafeez, 40, in his 18th year as a Pakistan player, the epitome of the anchoring but elegant batsman, a Test opener with ten hundreds, now a top-order T20 firebrand, torch-bearing for senior citizens in the format? Stop it 2020, stop it now.When the year began, Hafeez wasn’t even in the Pakistan side, par for the course for a story such as this. He had retired from Tests, and after a middling World Cup, been nudged out in the name of post-tournament transitions. Without a central contract and overlooked for the series against Sri Lanka and the tour to Australia, it felt like he was finally gone. Pakistan were moving on, and of all the weird selection decisions of Misbah-ul-Haq’s regime, this was probably the least strange.Transitions are fickle moments, though, so, of course, two series losses later and by the start of this year, Hafeez was back, for exactly the reason that he was initially turfed aside – too old then, wizened and experienced now. Since then, bingo, with the added bonus of proving pretty much everyone wrong.ESPNcricinfo LtdHe’s the seventh-highest run scorer this year in the format, with the fourth-highest average. But it’s his strike rate that catches the eye. At 138.84, it’s better than those of a fair gaggle of elite top-order batsmen: Jonny Bairstow, David Warner, Virat Kohli, KL Rahul, Dawid Malan, Babar Azam, Aaron Finch and Fakhar Zaman. Hafeez’s strike rate is better this year than those of at least seven batsmen in the ICC’s current top ten, including Glenn Maxwell and Colin Munro.Filter it down to performances at one down only, where Hafeez has batted 17 out of 27 innings, and his year becomes even more golden: a near-50 average and a strike rate above 142 are the kind of metrics it’s difficult to slice any which way other than very good.ESPNcricinfo LtdSo there is a mischief at play so far, brandishing these big names against whom Hafeez compares favourably on the basis of a solitary – and very unusual year – and that too across such a spectrum of T20 standards. The truer, more revealing, comparison for Hafeez is with Hafeez himself, and with pretty much his entire T20 career to this season.When the format was in its infancy, in the mid-2000s, he appeared the perfect player for it: more than bits-n’-pieces, not quite a genuine allrounder. And for his first two years – 2005 and 2006 – he was much more. All but one of his 23 innings in those two years – mostly in the much-loved ABN-AMRO Twenty20 cup for Faisalabad Wolves – were as opener, averaging 34.35 at a strike rate of 163.18. Throw in 20 wickets and an economy of under 6.5 and you have a player ahead of his time.ESPNcricinfo LtdThis last decade, though, as the format evolved, Hafeez kind of didn’t. If ever a strike rate captured the limitations of a batsman it was his from 2010 to 2019: 116.34 was a batsman good enough to find occasional boundaries when opening, but not nearly enough to make up for the missed scoring opportunities leading to them. And given that strike rate remained fairly stable over this period, it was reflective of a batsman either not willing – or able – to expand his game.This year’s data may as well be speaking of a different batsman. Now batting at mostly three and four, his middle-overs play, where he was once slowest, is unrecognisable. Across 2018 and 2019, Hafeez’s strike rate across that phase was 114 (and about 115 if you stretch back to 2015). This year it has jumped to 147 (all for matches where ESPNcricinfo has ball-by-ball data). The driver for that would appear to be his boundary-hitting; he has gone from hitting one every nine balls (across 2018 and 2019) to more than one every over this year in those middle overs (for matches where ESPNcricinfo has ball-by-ball data).He has always been better value at the death than often thought – a legacy, no doubt, of his early tape-ball years – but even there his strike rate has jumped to nearly 174 this year, up from 149 the previous two years.Hafeez seemed to discover power-hitting rather late in his career but glommed on to it this year•Getty ImagesHow has this happened, to a player as deep into his career – and often thought to be as set in his ways – as Hafeez? Primarily, it is that he has changed his ways, and perhaps because he was snubbed after the World Cup, understood the need for evolution. Leaving Test cricket has not only allowed him to give time to that need, it has also broadened his view of batting itself.Because he has been such a sweet timer of the ball, and because it had gotten him so far, it’s not entirely surprising it’s taken him till now to understand that power-hitting is as important in the modern game. It’s almost been an unlearning, to recognise that not every shot has to be timed impeccably to send the ball across or over the ropes.Freed from the other formats, he has devoted greater, more dedicated, time to range-hitting during practice. Watchers of his social media timelines will also have noted more time spent on golf courses recently (or at least more posts about it). That has helped him refine and better weaponise his bat swing, from a firmer base.ESPNcricinfo LtdTogether, the results are clear: not only has he hit more sixes (37) this year than in any before, but also more frequently (in terms of balls per six) than any year other than his first. Since 2010, in only one year has he hit boundaries more frequently than this one. Against pace in the middle overs in particular he has prospered. Across 2018 and 2019, he scored at 120 against fast bowlers and hit more sixes than fours (19 sixes and 11 fours in 271 balls). But this year he has hit 31 boundaries (24 fours and 7 sixes) in just 126 balls, at a strike rate of 168.And at the risk of obsessing too much over his age in an era, and format, where more players are playing for longer, it’s worth repeating that he turned 40 this year. You cut up metrics – be at least 35 years old, average at least 45 with a strike rate of 135 – to show how all-time Hafeez’s year has been.ESPNcricinfo LtdChris Gayle and AB de Villiers were younger when they made this list but more relevantly, by that time, they were specialists with a long pedigree in the format. Nothing about Hafeez’s last decade suggested he was capable of this. Yet here he is, somewhere between a reinvention and a glorious little lash of the tail of a confounding and unexpected career.

Scenarios: LSG and Titans well-placed but nine teams still in contention

A negative NRR could leave RCB in a tight spot should they end up tied with multiple teams on points

S Rajesh09-May-2022Lucknow Super Giants: Mat 11, Pts 16, NRR 0.703
Not only have Lucknow Super Giants moved to the top of the table by winning their last four matches, they also have an excellent net run rate of 0.703, easily the best among all teams this season. Another win will seal their place in the playoffs, but they will be aiming beyond that for a top-two finish. At the moment, it’s still possible for Gujarat Titans and Rajasthan Royals to finish on more than 18.Defeats in their last three matches will keep Super Giants on 16 points with a possibility of five other teams joining them on 16 or more. Even with a healthy NRR at the moment, they will hope it doesn’t come to that.Gujarat Titans: Mat 11, Pts 16, NRR 0.120
Titans have slipped one spot to second after two successive losses, but they are still comfortably placed to qualify. Like Super Giants, all they need to book a place in the playoffs is one win from their last three games.However, if they lose all three they could be in trouble, for it’s still possible for as many as six teams to finish on 16 or more points.Rajasthan Royals: Mat 11, Pts 14, NRR 0.326
At the moment, Royals need two wins to be certain of qualification, though one victory should probably suffice. Their NRR of 0.326 is second only to that of Super Giants, which could come in handy, but that could change too depending on how the results go over the last two weeks.Even if they lose all their remaining games and finish on 14, Royals could still finish as the fourth team without NRR coming into play, but for that to happen several other results will have to go their way.Royal Challengers Bangalore: Mat 12, Pts 14, NRR -0.115
Royal Challengers Bangalore are on 14 points like Rajasthan Royals, but they have played an extra game and have a much poorer NRR. Both those factors leave them with less room to manoeuvre. However, there are still so many possibilities at this late stage in the league that Royal Challengers could miss out on the playoffs with 16 points, or qualify without NRR coming into play with 14. To be sure of qualification, they need two wins and 18 points.Capitals and Super Kings are the only teams in the bottom six with positive net run rates•BCCIDelhi Capitals: Mat 11, Pts 10, NRR 0.150
Sunrisers Hyderabad: Mat 11, Pts 10, NRR -0.031
Punjab Kings: Mat 11, Pts 10, NRR -0.231
These three teams are bunched together with 10 points from 11 matches each. Each of them has a chance to qualify if they win their remaining games and finish on 16, though it could still come down to NRR. If they lose one, then they will have to hope that at least one of Royals or Royal Challengers – who are both currently on 14 – lose all their remaining games and stay on 14, along with the other two teams in contention here. Royal Challengers already have a negative NRR, which means the rest will fancy their chances if it comes down to a net-run-rate battle against them.Delhi Capitals are the only team among the three to currently have a positive NRR, while Punjab Kings are the only team among them who don’t have a game to play against Mumbai Indians, the one team who are out of the competition for sure. Sunrisers Hyderabad have the worst momentum of the lot, having lost four on the trot.Kolkata Knight Riders: Mat 12, Pts 10, NRR -0.057
Chennai Super Kings: Mat 11, Pts 8, NRR 0.028
Both Kolkata Knight Riders and Chennai Super Kings are in a situation where they have to win their remaining games and finish on 14 points, and then hope that other results go their way. Since four teams are already on 14 or more, the best-case scenario for these two teams is a net-run-rate confrontation. On that aspect, Super Kings are slightly better off at the moment as they have a positive NRR despite winning only four games out of 11.In fact, it is still possible that apart from Super Giants, Titans and Mumbai Indians, the other seven teams all finish on 14 points while fighting for two spots. Now that would be a net-run-rate scenario like never before.

Tactics Board: Tackling Hasaranga, Sri Lanka's in-form openers and the toss impact

Where the Pakistan-Sri Lanka Asia Cup final could be won and lost

Gaurav Sundararaman11-Sep-20225:52

Asia Cup final: are Sri Lanka the favourites?

Before the Asia Cup, Sri Lanka vs Pakistan was a final that not many would have predicted, with India touted as favourites. Before this edition, the two teams last met in the tournament in 2016 when Pakistan beat Sri Lanka by six wickets. Although Sri Lanka emerged victorious against Pakistan in the Super 4 this time, it is tough to predict who holds an edge in this match where toss will play a crucial role.While Sri Lanka have benefitted with some strong performances by their openers, Pakistan have managed to win some tight games, thanks to their lower and middle order. Both teams have a few issues to deal with. Who will come out on top? Here’s a look at some of the factors that could play a key role in the final.ESPNcricinfo LtdWin toss, win match
Similar to last year’s T20 World Cup held in the UAE, the toss has played a major role in the competition. Since the start of 2021, there have been 21 T20Is played at the Dubai International Stadium and only on three occasions has the team batting first won the match. Those three games were played against Scotland, Hong Kong and Afghanistan by India and New Zealand. The Dubai pitch is known to be favourable for chasing because of two factors: dew and the pitch getting faster to bat on under lights.In the last 21 T20Is, only on one instance has a team that won the toss chosen to bat first. Since 2021, the average first innings winning score in Dubai is in excess of 190. In case teams bat first, they would want to score a minimum of 185 runs to give themselves a good chance. One approach the team batting first could look to do is to keep wickets in hand and then accelerate in the end to ensure they reach beyond par score rather than falling short.ESPNcricinfo LtdTrial against spin
Surprisingly, both Pakistan and Sri Lanka batters have fared below par against spin this tournament. Barring the duo of Mohammad Nawaz and Mohammad Rizwan, Pakistan batters have been a bit circumspect against spin. The likes of Fakhar Zaman, Iftikhar Ahmed, Babar Azam and Khushdil Shah strike at less than 100 against spin this tournament. Sri Lanka will be looking to capitalise on this weakness of Pakistan. To handle the spinners in the middle overs, Pakistan could promote Shadab Khan and Nawaz, and play their match-ups tactically to catch Sri Lanka off guard.For Sri Lanka, the gulf in playing spin between Kusal Mendis and the rest is noteworthy. Mendis has scored 86 runs from 46 balls at a strike rate of 186.9 with eight sixes against the spinners. But the likes of Charith Asalanka, Pathum Nissanka and Dasun Shanaka have struggled against spin.Shanaka has scored 30 off 33 balls while Asalanka has made only seven runs from 15 deliveries against spin. Nissanka, who has a better average among them, has scored 65 runs off 55 balls off spinners. While both Nissanka and Asalanka have been dismissed twice each by spinners in this year’s Asia Cup, Shanaka has been removed three times. Pakistan could look to bowl more overs of spin if they can remove Mendis early. Based on the above data about spinners, Shadab is going to be a key player for Pakistan with bat and ball.ESPNcricinfo LtdThe Hasaranga challenge
When Sri Lanka and Pakistan met in the Super 4, Wanindu Hasaranga, who returned with figures of 3 for 21, was the the Player of the Match. He took the key wickets of Babar, Iftikhar and Asif Ali to dent them in the middle overs. Interestingly, Hasaranga’s record against Pakistan in T20Is has been way above par compared to other oppositions. He has taken 11 wickets at an average of 9.09 and has conceded just 6.25 runs per over from 96 balls. One of his weapons is the googly and Pakistan’s record in this tournament against this particular delivery has been a bit underwhelming. They have scored 72 runs from 63 balls while losing four wickets. One potential plan to counter Hasaranga could be to ensure left-hand batters face him more. In this Asia Cup, all of Hasaranga’s six wickets are right-hand batters while the left-hand batters have scored at par.Related

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Shadab Khan has got his groove back

SL learning on the fly, teaching a lesson to their big brothers

Naseem Shah, the wunderkind from Lower Dir who conquered Sharjah

Getting past the openers of Sri Lanka
Before this Asia Cup, one of the biggest concerns for Sri Lanka was their opening stand. They averaged 19.80 and struck at 117 since January 2022 without creating any impetus in the powerplay. Sri Lanka decided to replace Danushka Gunathilaka with Mendis for the Asia Cup and it has been a refreshing change. Barring the first game against Afghanistan, their openers have led from the front.Nissanka and Mendis have struck at 143 at an average of 41.6 with four fifties in this competition. Mendis’ ability to play spin and Nissanka’s to counter pace have been key to their success. Sri Lanka have been the best team in the powerplay in this Asia Cup, scoring at 127.7 and hitting a boundary every 5.5 balls. The openers have also scored around 45% of the runs for Sri Lanka. If Pakistan need to get past Sri Lanka, they should get the openers out early to expose the middle order.

The Hundred – everything you need to know (or have forgotten)

Here’s the condensed and updated explainer on the tournament, to help make clear what’s different and what stays the same

Alan Gardner02-Aug-20221:58

Explainer: How to read the Hundred scorecard

Just like last summer, in between renditions of “football’s coming home”, I’ve seen this thing called “the Hundred” being advertised on the BBC. It looked kind of like cricket, so here I am…
Yessir, you’ve come to the right place. The Hundred is the rootin’-est tootin’-est thing to happen to the game since they added a third stump. Or at least since T20s started in 2003.Ah yes, I heard about this. Cricket with pop music and jazzy kits. But how is it different from T20?
Well, it’s shorter, for a start – 100 balls (hence the name) compared to 120. And to speed things up they will bowl ten balls in a row from each end, meaning a game should take less than two-and-a-half hours.That doesn’t seem significantly shorter…
We live in an entertainment-rich, time-poor era. And being able to squeeze in a televised game between 6.30 and 9pm – prime time on the BBC – was supposedly one of the big selling points. It’s also SHINY and NEW (relatively speaking), which might help when being dangled in front of the new generation the ECB is hoping to attract to the sport.Related

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Globe-trotting James Foster ready to plant flag for English coaching at the Hundred

Tactics board: Par scores, home advantage and 10-ball sets

Okay, you’ve got my attention. Give me the hard sell
For the next four-and-a-half weeks, over the course of 34 men’s and 26 women’s games, the cream of English cricket – plus a generous dollop of overseas talent – will be bouncing around on a nightly basis in front of (hopefully) packed stands. All of the games will be broadcast on Sky’s cricket channel, with a selection also showing on the BBC (if you’re following in India, it will be on Fancode). There will be in-house DJs to add to the atmosphere in the grounds, and rule tweaks to try to makes things simpler for casual followers. As in T20, fours and sixes will be the order of the day; unlike T20, nobody will mention the word “overs”, as it is balls 1-100 that matter.There seems to be a deficit of women’s games this year. Why’s that?
The timing of the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, which features women’s cricket for the first time (but not men’s), means the women’s Hundred will start eight days after the men’s competition. Women’s teams will only play six group games this year, rather than eight.They also get paid a lot less, right?
This is true, although the ECB has doubled women’s salaries across the board. The highest-paid women will receive £31,250 (US$ 41,500) – compared to £15,000 (US$ 20,000) in 2021 – with those in the lowest band receiving £7500 (US$ 10,000) – up from £3600 (US$ 4800). Men’s salaries range from £30,000 (US$ 36,500) to £125,000 (US$ 152,000), returning to the levels originally set before the pandemic led to wages being cut.The Hundred is the rootin’-est tootin’-est thing to happen to the game since they added a third stump•Getty ImagesSo what are the rule changes and things I should look out for?
Balls will be delivered in sets of five, with an option for captains to keep a bowler on for ten balls in a row if they are feeling in the groove (and they can bowl their quota of 20 balls in two sets of ten each, but not consecutive sets). There will be a 25-ball powerplay, with fielding restrictions in place, and the fielding side can call a two-minute strategic time out thereafter. If a catch is taken after the batters have crossed, the next batter in will still be on strike – a change that MCC has since introduced to the Laws for the game as a whole. Despite all the tweaks, the spectacle by and large should look recognisably crickety.Are there any other innovations?
Sky will stream the opening matches in the men’s and the women’s competitions on TikTok, once again with the aim of reaching that all-important “new audience of young cricket fans”. The broadcaster is also introducing its “power meter”, a graphic using Hawk-Eye data to measure big hits.Right then. Give me some dates for the diary
The men’s competition starts this week, with 2021 winners Southern Brave taking on Welsh Fire at the Ageas Bowl on Wednesday. The women will be in action from August 11, with the first of the double-headers – and in a twist reminiscent of them having the opening night to themselves last year, Oval Invincibles versus Northern Superchargers will be in the evening slot, with the men playing earlier in the day.The top team in the group stage will qualify directly for the final, to be staged at Lord’s on September 3, with second and third playing in an eliminator the day before.

How do you bat on pitches like Ahmedabad? Take risks, choose your shots, use your feet

Wickets like the one for the third Test might be a lottery, but as a batsman you’re not quite doomed from the start

Aakash Chopra02-Mar-20216:11

Rohit Sharma – ‘Intent wasn’t to survive but to score’

Of the 2412 Tests played so far, only 22 have ended in two days. That explains all the talk about the two-day Test match in Ahmedabad. (Of these 22 Tests, nine were played in England and two in India.)Since it’s rare that a two-day Test has nothing to do with the state of the wicket, debates about the pitch for the Test have captured a lot of mind space.So was the pitch challenging? Definitely. Was it a two-day pitch? Perhaps not.Related

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  • Motera pitch could be a backhanded compliment to England

  • Good Test technique is still built on a solid defence

  • Why are England batsmen taught to sweep instead of using their feet against spinners?

  • Ahmedabad pink-ball Test: Shortest completed match since 1935

One must bear in mind that dew made batting a lot easier in the sessions under lights. The ball got really wet and that made it significantly harder for both fast and slow bowlers. It’s almost a travesty that the four “day” sessions were enough for the majority of wickets to fall, deciding the outcome of the game.There were more than a few dismissals that had only to do with the batsman’s response on a challenging surface and not so much with the surface itself. Zak Crawley in the second innings, Jonny Bairstow in both innings, Ben Stokes in both innings, Cheteshwar Pujara, Virat Kohli, Washington Sundar and Axar Patel in the first innings, to mention a few.What was it about the surface that led to so many errors of judgement, given we are talking about a lot of quality Test players here? In my opinion, there were three factors that were responsible for the batting display.Firstly, the red-soil surface for the third Test was a lot faster than the black-clay pitch for the second Test. Though there was a lot of turn on offer in Chennai, the ball came on reasonably slowly after pitching, and that allowed the batsmen to devise a strategy. Of course, scoring in Chennai also required a bit of bravado and a slice of luck, but a good few batsmen showed that it could be done. On the contrary, the pace in Ahmedabad was a lot greater and that gave the batsmen very little time to adjust after the ball had pitched.Second: the faster surface was accentuated by the extra coating of lacquer on the pink ball, which skidded off the pitch a lot more than the red ball would have, which further reduced the time to adjust or react after pitching.Thirdly, whether it’s spin or seam, consistency of lateral movement off the surface is key to batting success. In Chennai, everything spun but in Ahmedabad only a few balls did. When that happens, you’re in two minds as to which line you should play for. The occasional but significant spin in Ahmedabad forced batsmen to play for the spin – that is, to play down the wrong line for deliveries that came on straight. That explains the large number of dismissals to the straight ball. It’s not that these fine players had forgotten the art of batting and couldn’t keep the straight balls out. The viciously turning balls prior to those straight, wicket-taking balls sowed seeds of doubt.Having played the second Test on a turner will have corrupted the batsmen’s judgement somewhat too. Once the batsmen saw puffs of dust and a couple of balls turning square, the collective assumption was that this pitch was also as much of a turner as the last one.Axar Patel’s pace made him lethal on the Motera pitch•BCCISo how does one bat on a surface like this? Is survival really down to the luck one enjoys on the day? And is there a way to score runs too? Crawley and Rohit Sharma showed that it was possible.The trick to playing someone like Patel on that surface with the pink ball is to treat every ball as a slider, which comes on with the arm. The first aim should be to keep the ball from hitting the front pad, for in the DRS era you can never be too careful about protecting the front leg. But you must still plant the front foot in line with the ball and not inside it, for going too far leg side will make you vulnerable if the ball spins. And while defending, it’s vital to keep the bat in front of the pad and not beside it – which Joe Root was guilty of a couple of times in the second innings. Of course there’s the turning ball that might take the outside edge, but so be it; you can’t possibly defend both pad and edge on a surface like this.Patel’s pace made him the most difficult bowler to negotiate, for there was hardly a foolproof way of scoring runs against him. R Ashwin’s variations, on the other hand, were both subtle and less alarming. He didn’t increase his pace manifold but used the angles beautifully. Jack Leach, like Patel, enjoyed the inconsistency in turn, but unfortunately for England, he wasn’t as fast or accurate as his Indian counterpart.And that’s the other thing about spin bowling: you can only increase the pace so much, and when you go beyond that optimum, you start undercutting the ball and lose accuracy. Leach’s slowness gave some room for the batsmen to score: you could use your feet to smother the spin, sweep, and when it was a little short, you could use the depth of the crease. These were things you couldn’t do against Patel.Most challenging surfaces force the batsman’s hand a bit, for there’s always a ball that has your name on it. It might be your first ball, your tenth or your 50th. On these pitches, an overly defensive approach is untenable. One must take some amount of risk on a regular basis, provided you pick the right ball and stroke and also have some mastery over that shot. A proper sweep was a good shot in Chennai but fraught with danger in Ahmedabad. Use of the feet is important, playing shots is critical, but when and how holds the key to succeeding. All said, it’s indeed easier said than done. And it can’t be done without a huge dollop of luck.

Stats – Jayasuriya's record-breaking start, Galle's result streak, and Babar's fourth-innings form

All the important numbers from the second Test in Galle, where Sri Lanka secured their biggest win over Pakistan

Sampath Bandarupalli28-Jul-2022246 The margin of Sri Lanka’s victory in the second Test, their biggest in terms of runs against Pakistan in Test cricket. Their previous best was a 209-run victory in 2012, also in Galle, while defending a target of 510.29 Number of wickets for Prabath Jayasuriya in his three Tests so far. Only India’s Narendra Hirwani, with 31 scalps, had more wickets to his name than Jayasuriya in his first three Tests, while Australia’s Charlie Turner also had 29 wickets after three Tests.ESPNcricinfo Ltd10 Consecutive matches won by teams batting second in Test cricket before Pakistan’s defeat in Galle. The previous longest winning streak was eight Tests played across November and December in 2002. The last team to win batting first in Test cricket before Sri Lanka was South Africa, during their home series in April against Bangladesh.7 Number of players with a five-for in each of their first three Test matches, including Jayasuriya. He is the first Sri Lankan to achieve this feat and only the second player from Asia after Axar Patel.

4 Five-wicket hauls for Jayasuriya in his first three Tests. Turner, Tom Richardson, Vernon Philander and Axar also had four five-fors in their first three outings in Test cricket, while Rodney Hogg had a record five five-fors.6 Three-plus wickets for Jayasuriya in all six innings he has bowled so far in his Test career. Arthur Mailey also claimed three-plus wickets in each of his first six Test innings, while Sri Lanka’s Ajantha Mendis had three or more scalps in his first eight innings in Test cricket.

85.37 Percentage of matches ending in a result in Test cricket at the Galle International Stadium. Only six of the 41 Test matches that the venue has hosted in Test cricket have ended in a draw. Centurion’s SuperSport Park is the only venue that has a better percentage in terms of Test matches with a result – 88.89, with just three of the 27 Tests ending in a draw. Each of the last 19 Test matches played in Galle since 2014 has produced a result, the third-longest streak for any venue.ESPNcricinfo LtdRelated

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4 Scores of fifty or more for Babar Azam in the fourth innings of Test matches in 2022. He has scored 387 runs in four innings at an average of 96.75 batting last in Tests this year. Only four other batters have scored four or more fifty-plus scores in the fourth innings in a calendar year.

Sunil Narine and the fading of offspin

He hasn’t been the same bowler since his action was brought under scrutiny in 2014

Osman Samiuddin17-Mar-2021Sunil Narine is lingering. Narine, explained the West Indies chief selector Roger Harper ahead of the series against Sri Lanka for which he was not considered, had indicated that he was “not ready” to return yet to international cricket.Not ready because last October his action was reported once again, during the IPL. As is the practice in some T20 leagues, he was placed on a “warning list” that would allow him to continue bowling until and if he was called again, whereupon he would be banned from bowling.Unhappy with him dangling in this quasi-purgatory, where he could bowl but with the knowledge that one delivery could see him banned, the Kolkata Knight Riders decided to fight back. They sent slow-motion video footage of his bowling from the game in question to a tournament committee on suspect actions, made up of two former cricketers, a former umpire, a board administrator and approximately zero human movement specialists or biomechanists. They viewed the footage with “the naked eye” from “back and side angles” and came “to the conclusion that the elbow-bend appears to be within the range of permissible limits”.Related

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Two things about this occasion are worth noting. One, the umpires reported concerns with all of Narine’s 24 deliveries from the game, which is not often the case. Usually specific types of deliveries are highlighted by the umpire, with details of when they were delivered.Two, unlike in international cricket – leagues have their own protocols for suspect actions – Narine was not sent to a lab for an independent assessment of his action. There he would have been required to replicate his match action in front of sports scientists and have it rigorously tested by all manner of hardware and software before it was deemed legal or illegal. Narine was tarred by the naked eye of the umpire and subsequently cleared by the naked eye of non-specialists, which, as a method, seems to have bypassed entirely the advances in modern science in the 21st century.Since the pandemic began, the more thorough ICC-led process of assessing actions has not been available even in top-flight international cricket – it being difficult to ensure all those reported can travel to labs. If a bowler were to be called in a bilateral series tomorrow, their action would be judged by an expert panel on video footage alone. This panel could have on it people who run the testing labs, but it’s still only video footage they’re looking at. So it’s entirely understandable that Narine doesn’t feel ready right now. The IPL has been his main gig for some time and if he’d played international cricket before it, been reported and his action found illegal, under the regulations he would not be able to play in the IPL.More or less, this is where Narine has been – not feeling ready with his action – and in this lingering pose ever since he was first reported in the Champions League in 2014 – twice in a matter of days. He has been reported four more times since. At various times he has been banned from bowling in international cricket, banned from bowling offbreaks in the IPL, and placed on warning lists in the PSL. Each time he has corrected his action and returned; sometimes, as ahead of the 2015 IPL, he had to be cleared twice by different labs, just because.Can’t bowl? Can bat. Narine’s hitting has come along in leaps and bounds over the last few years•Randy Brooks – CPL T20 / GettyBut at each moment the effect has been to force him to retreat a little further from the game itself. He missed the 2015 World Cup because he wasn’t sure of his action. Ditto the following year’s T20 World Cup and the World Cup qualifiers in 2018. He has only played 12 international matches since 2017, and since September 2019 only two CPLs, one IPL and a bit of the Super50. It’s become real life Whac-A-Mole: here he appears, hoping not to get called, there he goes, here he appears again.The real-deal Narine is long gone, the man with the game’s best carrom ball, the man who had not a doosra but a post-doosra, who was not only the next level in offspin evolution but who looked like he was deconstructing, cherubically, the very idea of offspin.

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Bureaucracy neutered Narine, not a witch-hunt. The ICC’s clampdown on suspect actions in 2014 was a triumph of the former, dousing the charged idea of chucking as a moral failing. In the process, though, it took some of the humanness away from the process of dealing with it. Vicon cameras, human-movement specialists, standardised testing protocols, accredited labs, boxes ticked, reports compiled; suddenly, illegal actions were an infomercial.Historically cricket dealt with chuckers by lynch-mobbing them out of the game. Now it chose to be the pre-recorded voice down the end of a phone, politely informing bowlers their actions were outside the parameters of legality and to take up any complaints with an entirely different department that is experiencing a busy period and may not be able to respond to your query immediately. Or ever.Perhaps it was necessary, given that we weren’t long out of the fires that nearly consumed Muttiah Muralitharan’s career. But because offspinners who could bowl doosras became the biggest victims of this clampdown, it also stopped dead in its track whatever evolutionary jump offspin could have taken, with someone like Narine at the forefront. Certainly in white-ball cricket, deprived of an essential variety, offspin has not been the same since.There’s much less of it overall, for one. Comparing a similar span pre- and post-clampdown (from the start of 2009 to the end of 2014, and then the start of 2015 to the end of February this year) the percentage of balls delivered by offspinners in ODIs has fallen from 20.55% to 15.04%. Legspin has doubled, slow left-arm has fallen slightly, and left-arm wristspin has increased 52-fold. Three offspinners in the first period took 100 ODI wickets but none did in the second; 12 took 50 ODI wickets in the first, only five did in the second, three of whom are allrounders.In all T20s there has been a similar trend, from offspin forming 15.65% of all balls delivered before to 11.57% now. That masks an especially sharp drop in T20Is, from 20.84% to 11.2%.The overall ODI average for offspin bowling has jumped from 35.42 to 41.31 since 2015, as has the strike rate, from 45.11 to 49.68. By contrast, legspin’s corresponding numbers have trended downwards. The fall in these metrics in T20s are not nearly as pronounced but that is against a backdrop of significantly less offspin being bowled in the first place – and much of that is bowled by allrounders: 15 of the 18 offspinners who have bowled at least 1000 balls in ODIs since 2015 are allrounders.Six years on now, we can sense something more has been lost beyond what this data shows. Trends can be cyclical, so offspinners may become important again, particularly in T20s. But not knowing where it could have gone had Narine and others continued, how the balance between bat and ball might have tilted, how the game might have developed, is a loss difficult to calculate.Many will argue that these bowlers contravened a law, but the thing about bowling actions is that the more you learn, the less you know. We still know very little, for instance, about intent in elbow straightening, or how injuries impact it. We know even less about causation: between elbow straightening and speed or greater revolutions, or its impact on the doosra, or whether straightening is an advantage at all.Allowing 15 degrees of elbow straightening is not an entirely arbitrary cut-off limit between what is legal and isn’t, but it does lean heavily towards being an aesthetic one. The game it odd beyond 15 degrees, that it is throwing. And yet, there’s a study co-authored by renowned sports scientist Tim Noakes that concludes that it is actually impossible for an umpire to conclusively call a bowler’s action based only on naked-eye observation. The internal whirring of the elbow and even its external motions, the study says, are simply too complex to process through a pair of eyes.Indeed, if you look really hard, 15 degrees can feel no sturdier than a bandage tasked with holding back a world of biomechanical truth bombs from bursting out and dropping themselves on long-held myths about straight-arm bowling.

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The pandemic has made life harder for Narine. As well as not having access to a testing centre for detailed analysis of his action, he has not been able to work with Carl Crowe, his long-time coach, as often and as regularly as he might like. It’s almost like he’s working blind on rectifying whatever needs rectifying on the action.But – and this is the thing to cling to – Narine is still around, lingering but definitely around. Is there another bowler who has been reported as often who is? Mohammad Hafeez maybe, though he’s primarily a batsman.ESPNcricinfo LtdEvery ball Narine has bowled in the six years since being first reported, he has bowled under a magnifying glass not placed over any other bowler. That’s just the nature of how this works: that the more you get called, the more umpires scrutinise your action and, perhaps, are inclined to call you. Both franchise and bowler expressed surprise when Narine was called at the last IPL. Suggestions that the umpires might have decided pre-game to report him are unfounded, but they’re not outrageous. To bowl under that kind of pressure, in a format where every ball potentially carries the game with it – well, the wonder is that it hasn’t broken Narine yet.It’s changed him, sure. He’s not a strike bowler anymore but he’s still brought control to his teams. Most counterintuitively, he has become a mould-breaking, pinch-hitting opening batsman, and last season in the IPL, he was even teasing more shades in his batting.More power to him, in that if he’s not that bowler anymore, he’s not that cricketer anymore either.

Can Bangladesh's batters take a leaf out of their bowlers' book?

“Our bowlers are always making contributions, while the batsmen have to develop further. We will work on it,” says Mehidy

Mohammad Isam16-Dec-2022Shakib Al Hasan had joked earlier this year that Bangladesh must be the fittest cricket team in the world after observing the number of overs they spend fielding. On that day, Bangladesh’s top order had collapsed for the second time in the Dhaka Test against Sri Lanka. Shakib was making a point about how two or three of their batters lacked mental strength but were perhaps physically fit. Within Shakib’s light-hearted comment lied a bigger truth.Bangladesh’s bowlers have done the heavy-lifting this year, especially compared to their batters. Their bowlers putting on long hours and fielders chasing leather after a disappointing score on the board by the batters is a common sighting. Bangladesh’s bowlers have the second most number of overs in 2022, and the team above them is England who have played five Tests more.Related

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The batters, however, have faced the second-fewest number of balls this year, underlining their culpability.Obviously, it is not just the physical effort or the number of hours that should be considered. Bangladesh’s fast bowlers have improved significantly while the spinners have maintained their long-standing reputation.It might seem odd at first to highlight the Bangladesh bowlers on the day that two Indian batters scored hundreds in total domination. But to bowl 195.3 overs across two innings with roughly three full bowlers after two got injured, deserves some praise. Shakib, playing with a rib injury, bowled only 12 overs in the first innings while Ebadot Hossain’s last contribution was Shreyas Iyer’s wicket on the second morning. It was left to Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Khaled Ahmed and Taijul Islam to bowl most of the 97.3 remaining overs.Apart from the Mount Maunganui miracle and a couple of big knocks against Sri Lanka, it has been a forgettable 2022 for Bangladesh’s batters in Tests. Their top four have produced just two centuries and four fifties this year, averaging the second lowest total in 14 years.Mehidy, Player-of-the-Series in the ODIs and the one who keeps contributing with bat and ball consistently, defended the batters but also said that Bangladesh have to work on their mistakes.”Batsmen have fewer opportunities than a bowler, who get to bowl in spells,” he said. “They can make a comeback. Batsmen don’t have that luxury. Our bowlers have improved and are always making contributions. Batsmen have to develop further. We will work on it. They are talking about it, especially their mistakes. They are trying to find solutions.”Mehidy Hasan Miraz – “I feel that our batsmen will definitely make a comeback. If they work on their mistakes, they will find a solution”•Associated PressMehidy believes that if the batters can make a fist of the massive task in hand over the next two days against India, it will certainly help their self-confidence.”You need to have skills to survive in international cricket. We have skillful players in the team. They have been playing well for a long time. But it is a team game. Not everyone will have the same form. I might not have as good as a series as this one in our next series.”This is how it goes. It is important to make contributions in the team, and to come back to form. I feel that our batsmen will definitely make a comeback. If they work on their mistakes, they will find a solution.”The wicket improves in Chittagong, as we have seen in losing a Test match here. A Test match isn’t decided in one day. We have to keep batting, although it is a big challenge. It is also a huge opportunity for our batters to play a long innings. Two days are remaining. Playing well in this match will give them a lot of confidence,” he said.Mehidy avoided making a comparison between the batters and bowlers, but it is clear that he is part of the group that has contributed heavily for Bangladesh this year. The fast-bowling group has caught the eye with their match-winning efforts in the big moments. Ebadot, Mehidy and Taskin were key players in New Zealand, while Taskin played a big hand in South Africa. Mehidy had a monumental outing against India, helped by Shakib and Ebadot with the ball.It is hard to find a consistent streak by the batters. Litton Das has looked to be in best form while Mushfiqur has had his moments in Tests this year. Mahmudul Hasan Joy, Tamim Iqbal and Yasir Ali all showed glimpses of form, but it hasn’t been an overall good year for them. There’s still a few chances remaining in the rest of this game and the next Test, though.If they can somehow mastermind a turnaround, Bangladesh’s batters will get all the plaudits. More than that, they will want to land a final contribution in a Test side that started off in a magnificent manner this year, but hasn’t quite reached those heights since then.

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